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Archaeological findings at Keeladi, Tamil Nadu, reveal a 6th century BCE civilization, with facial reconstructions of two ...
In the quest to understand the fundamental forces of nature, scientists have turned their attention to a long-debated theory: ...
Nvidia launched a new tool that lets developers generate AI images by first creating them in 3D. The awkwardly named Nvidia AI Blueprint for 3D-guided generative AI is available to download today ...
Scientists speculate that Bennu is part of a much larger ancestral asteroid that formed in the farthest reaches of the early solar system approximately 4.5 billion years ago. Japan’s efforts ...
Asteroid Bennu seems to have come from a long-lost world on the fringes of the solar system, where saltwater pooled and dried over thousands of years and life’s basic ingredients were widespread.
An evaporite sequence from ancient brine recorded in Bennu samples. Nature, 2025; 637 (8048): 1072 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08495-6 ...
May and his colleague Claudia Manzoni melded multiple images of Bennu taken at slightly different angles to transform the asteroid into an eye-popping 3D object.
Newly published images from Heriot-Watt University show the 9km wide Nadir Crater under the Atlantic, formed by an asteroid around the same time dinosaurs went extinct. Detailed 3D imaging has ...
3D imaging of Nadir asteroid crater High-resolution, 3D seismic data provided by TGS, a global geophysical company, confirmed their suspicions. The data proved that an asteroid, estimated to be ...
The Nadir asteroid was about the size of Bennu, which is currently the most hazardous object orbiting near Earth. Scientists say the most probable date that Bennu could hit Earth is 24 September ...
New images of an asteroid impact crater buried deep below the floor of the Atlantic Ocean have been published today by researchers at Heriot-Watt University. The images confirm the 9km Nadir Crater, ...
This image shows four views of asteroid Bennu along with a corresponding global mosaic. The images were taken on Dec. 2, 2018, by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft’s PolyCam camera.